Verify software volume control settings
First verify you see a small sound icon or
in the Windows notification area (bottom right-hand corner of your
screen). If this icon is missing, follow the steps below. If you see
this icon skip to next section.
Windows XP
- Open the Control panel
- Open the "Sounds and Audio Devices" icon.
- Verify the "Place volume icon in the taskbar" checkbox is checked. If this option is not available or is grayed out, skip to the next section of this document.
- If you were able to check this box, click ok and close out of this window and the Control Panel.
- Double-click the sound icon in the Systray and verify that all the sound volumes are mid-way or higher.
- Open the Control panel
- Open the "Sounds and Multimedia" icon.
- Verify the "Show volume control on the taskbar" checkbox is checked. If this option is not available or is grayed out, skip to the next section of this document.
- If you were able to check this box, click ok and close out of this window and the Control Panel.
- Double-click the sound icon in the Systray and verify that all the sound volumes are mid-way or higher.
- Open the Control panel
- Open the "Multimedia" icon.
- Check the checkbox for "Show volume control on the taskbar." If this section is grayed out, change the Playback "Preferred device" by clicking the down arrow and changing to an alternate selection. If that is also grayed out, skip to the next section of this document.
- If you were able to check this box, click ok and close out of this window and the Control Panel.
- Double-click the sound icon in the Systray and verify that all the sound volumes are mid-way or higher.
Verify the installed driver settings
- Open the Windows Device Manager
- Verify there are no conflicts or errors listed anywhere in Device Manager. If conflicts exist skip down to conflicts section.
- Verify no "Other devices" are listed. If other devices are listed skip down to other devices section.
- Verify that your "Sound, video and game controllers" category is listed, if not skip down to the missing sound card section.
- If no conflicts or other devices are listed and your sound card is listed with no conflicts, skip to the next section.
If
conflicts exists with your sound card or other devices installed in
your computer it is likely that either the drivers are not properly
installed for that device or the sound card or other devices are
conflicting. If you open the properties of the device that is
conflicting and view the properties, additional details about the
conflict can be found. Additional information about error codes as well
as help with Device Manager can be found on our Device Manager section.
If you are unable to locate additional information about your issue or are unable to resolve the issue, follow the steps below.
- Under Sound, Video and game controllers highlight each device and press the delete key to remove the device.
- Reboot the computer.
- As the computer is booting the system will detect the sound card and any of it's devices and re-install those devices. If prompted for a location of drivers, try pointing it to your sound card CD or your Windows CD. If this does not work or is unable to locate the proper files, you need to get the latest sound drivers from your sound card manufacturer.
If
Other devices are listed, these could be the sound card or another
conflicting device. If any other devices are listed it is recommended
you remove those devices, reboot the computer and let Windows redetect
the devices.
If this does not work, determine what device is not being detected and resolve that issue first.
If
you are missing the "Sound, video and game controllers" category in
Device Manager, it is likely that the sound card drivers are not
installed properly, sound card has been disabled, sound card is bad, or
no sound card is available in the computer. First, verify no conflicts
or other devices are present in the Device Manager; if these are present
it is likely they are the sound card or devices causing the sound card
not to be detected. Second, verify that the computer has a sound card
and that the sound card is enabled on the computer.
If this is an on-board sound card you can verify that it is enabled in CMOS setup.
If
you have no adapters or cannot click the down arrow to select the
correct adapter, close out of this Window. In Control Panel double-click
the System icon, click the Device Manager tab within Device Manager and ensure there are no yellow ! or red X.
If
you have either of these on any of your sound devices, remove
everything under Sound Video game controllers and reboot the computer.
If after rebooting the computer you still have the same conflicts,
double-click on the conflicting device and refer to our Device Manager
error code section giving you additional information on the error code
you are experiencing.
Verify speaker connections
Verify the speakers settings and speakers are not at fault by running through computer speaker troubleshooting.
Sound card drivers
If you have followed the above recommendations and you
are still unable to get the sound card to work, in Device Manager remove
all sound video and game controllers and reboot the computer. This
should cause Windows to reinstall all missing drivers and often can
correct corrupt drivers. If this does not work after rebooting the
computer download and install the latest sound card drivers from the
computer or sound card manufacturer. A listing of sound card drivers can
be found on our sound card driver page.
Defective hardware
Finally, if all of the above recommendations do not
resolve your issue it is likely that either the sound card is physically
bad or that the operating system is severely corrupt. We recommend you
contact the manufacturer of the sound card or computer for a replacement
or additional recommendations.
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